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Dental hygienist · oral pathology educator · The Path of RDH

Asked how she decided to start putting herself out there after years of staying quiet, Sucre describes the belief that had kept her off camera: "we are formed that we believe in altruism... we do not believe in showing, being show-off." Then she explains exactly what changed her mind.
She walks through how she actually talks to AI — not typing prompts, but narrating out loud the way she'd explain something over coffee, then asking it to hold that same voice on the page: "Marge, how can I, without infantilizing this information, explain this in easy-to-digest terms to other people?"
She's candid about what happened when she tried to post daily across every platform this year: "By the end of the first month, I was completely burned out. This was unsustainable, for just a single person" — and the permission she gave herself afterward.
Near the end, she names the test she runs on her own AI-assisted content, and it's not a soft one: "Are you going to recognize yourself in a year from today? You might just be a billboard, a mannequin, or something."
"If you have a knowledge about this topic, and you feel like 100 percent sure that you know — part of your job is to let others know that information. Otherwise, you're not doing any service. You're doing a disservice."
"It helps me big time to really know how to tailor my message without losing my voice."
"Patients trust people. They don't trust systems. They don't trust AI. They can only trust us, because we are the ones in front of them."
You're a hygienist, dentist, or clinician building a content presence solo — no team, no agency — and you're either burning out trying to post daily or staying silent because visibility still feels like ego. If you want to hear how someone actually uses AI to hold her voice steady instead of replacing it, this is the episode.
Take one piece of content you'd normally explain to a colleague in plain, natural language — a diagnosis, a workflow, a patient question you get often. Say it out loud to your phone's voice memo or your AI tool of choice, exactly as you'd say it to a friend over coffee. Then ask the tool to tighten it for a general audience without changing your wording or tone. Compare the two versions side by side. If the second one still sounds like you, you've found your Marge. If it doesn't, that's your signal for where the line sits.
If keeping your own voice consistent while your content workload grows is the real bottleneck, book a Personal AI Workout — built around getting your voice into a system you can actually sustain, not replace.